Themes
Conference Day
Session Type
Themes
- Assessment and evaluation 1 match
- Change leadership (ASCN WG 3) 1 match
- Costs and benefits of change (ASCN WG 2) 1 match
- DBER 1 match
- Department-level change 5 matches
- Equity and inclusion (ASCN WG 5) 4 matches
- Evidence-based practice 5 matches
- Faculty development 8 matches
- Guiding theories of change (ASCN WG 1) 7 matches
- Institutional-level change 8 matches
- Measuring the impacts of change (ASCN WG 4) 5 matches
- Student-focused 9 matches
Time Show all
2:45pm - 3:30pm
19 matchesResults 1 - 10 of 19 matches
Promoting and Sustaining Inclusivity Through (Minor) Changes In Undergraduate Science Assessment
Tommy Mayberry, University of Guelph; Sarah Ruffell, University of Pittsburgh-Bradford
Incorporating inclusivity within post-secondary classrooms is an institutional requirement of higher education. This project raises student awareness of the need for inclusivity in the classroom as well as in their ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Equity and inclusion (ASCN WG 5), Student-focused, Measuring the impacts of change (ASCN WG 4)
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Exploring Teaching Behaviors of Faculty by Context: An Analysis of Organizational Climate
Ivan Ceballos Madrigal, California State University-Fresno; Emily Walter, California State University-Fresno
Most faculty have knowledge of evidence-based instructional practices and access to the resources to carry them out. Despite this, efforts to transform postsecondary instruction have had only modest success (e.g. ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Guiding theories of change (ASCN WG 1), Evidence-based practice, Institutional-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Open Educational Resources: How to rethink the textbook from multiple perspectives
James morris, Purdue University-Main Campus
This poster will outline the value of Open Educational Resources (OER), while focusing on the strategies available for implementation in Higher Education. Strategies will emphasize approaches to take from an ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Evidence-based practice, Student-focused, Faculty development
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
A Simple Stochastic Model for Conceptualizing Organizational Change Initiatives
Lorne Whitehead, University of British Columbia; Scott Simkins, North Carolina A & T State University
Complex systems cannot be modeled exactly. However, simple approximate mathematical models can illustrate important factors, provide memorable terminology, offer plausible and memorable insights, and suggest new ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Guiding theories of change (ASCN WG 1), Costs and benefits of change (ASCN WG 2), Measuring the impacts of change (ASCN WG 4), Institutional-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Thriving and surviving as non-traditional students: A Qualitative Study
Ekeoma Uzogara, Emily Pepper, Camila Guillen, Braxton Spriggs, , , , , ,
Background: Historically, the National Center for Education Statistics defined "nontraditional students" as older students who do not receive bachelor's degrees prior to age 25 because that age gap ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Equity and inclusion (ASCN WG 5), Student-focused, Institutional-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Facilitating Departmental, Programmatic, and Curricular Change through Traveling Workshops
Mitchell Bender-Awalt, Carleton College; David Blockstein, Bard College; Diane Doser, University of Texas at El Paso; Anne Egger, Central Washington University; Heather Macdonald, College of William and Mary; Cathy Manduca, Carleton College; Dallas Rhodes, Humboldt State University; Catherine Riihimaki, 2NDNATURE Software
Academic departments and programs in higher education face challenges in adapting to shifting institutional priorities, fluctuating budgets, evolving research landscapes, and changing employment prospects for ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Guiding theories of change (ASCN WG 1), Evidence-based practice, Faculty development, Department-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Improving opportunities for student learning in large enrollment undergraduate STEM courses through the development of instructional team members that focus independently on classroom management and student thinking
Jonathan Cox, The University of Arizona
While overwhelming evidence in support of active learning has propelled many undergraduate courses toward transformation, instructors often encounter implementation challenges in large enrollment introductory STEM ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Evidence-based practice, Faculty development, Department-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Leveraging Course-Based Communities of Transformation to Effect Change in STEM Education
Jill Nelson, George Mason University; Stephanie Foster, George Mason University; Carrie Klein, George Mason University; Jaime Lester, George Mason University; Laura Poms, George Mason University; Jessica Rosenberg, George Mason University; Robert Sachs, George Mason University
Studies across the STEM disciplines have shown that student engagement in active learning improves student attitudes toward STEM, retention in STEM majors, and understanding of key concepts, with greater impact on ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Guiding theories of change (ASCN WG 1), Student-focused, Faculty development
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Building a better SET: An "outside-in" approach to developing and implementing improved student evaluations of teaching
Jessica Keating, University of Colorado at Boulder; Noah Finkelstein, University of Colorado at Boulder
Student evaluations of teaching (SETs) are a contentious, but ubiquitous, tool in teaching assessment. Wide-ranging stakeholders--from faculty assemblies to national organizing bodies to the courts--have recently ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Assessment and evaluation, Measuring the impacts of change (ASCN WG 4), Institutional-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm
Transforming the Educational Experience with High Impact Practices
Jaclyn Rivard, University of Southern Mississippi; sarah cox, Western Michigan University;
High Impact Practices (HIPs) are widely tested and have demonstrated impact for students from a wide range of backgrounds (Kuh, 2008), including as an effective way to increase student retention among ...
Session Type: Poster Presentation
Themes: Student-focused, Faculty development, Institutional-level change
Time: 2:45pm - 3:2:45pm - 3:30pm

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